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Terraced houses, now also in commercial use, built in the late 18th to early 19th century with later alterations. They are a two-storey and attic, six-bay terraced pair of dwellings constructed frmo large blocks of squared and coursed sandstone rubble, with a droved ashlar base course and stone cills to Number 43. Number 45 has been converted to a shop at the ground-floor. The grey slate roof has coped ashlar stacks, that to south truncated, and ashlar-coped skews. The principal west elevation has three symmetrical bays to the south with a timber door and letterbox fanlight to the centre and windows in the flanking bays. The first-floor has regular fenestration close to the eaves. The bays to the north have a centre door shop at the ground and two windows close to eaves at the first-floor. The attic-floor has a polygonal-roofed, canted dormer window to the centre, flanked by later small piended dormers and further canted dormers, all linked by a slate-hung mansard. The north (Mary Street) elevation is gabled, with a window to the east at each floor and a broad gablehead stack. There is also a door in a later bay at the outer east.
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